Corporate Collaborators
By CARLOS ALBERTO MONTANER
March 3, 2006; Page A11
A new economic model of a collectivist nature is emerging in parts of Latin
America with the complicity of some private-sector foreign companies. It was
first developed in the 1990s by Fidel Castro's government as a consequence of
the sudden cutoff of Soviet aid and was later adopted by Venezuela after the
rise to power of Hugo Chávez. Very likely, Bolivia will move in the same
direction. It is what Chávez calls "21st-century socialism."
In 1991, when the Soviet subsidy to Cuba -- estimated at $5 billion a year --
ended, the demise of communism on the island seemed inevitable. Suddenly, the
Cubans' already low levels of consumption shrank by 30% to 50%, plunging the
country into a real famine. Faced with this situation -- which left thousands of
Cubans disabled by malnutrition -- Castro was forced to find capital and
know-how in the West to keep his foundering economy afloat. But he did so
without renouncing his dictatorship or the economic model based on state
monopolies tightly controlled by the government.
Quite simply, he invited foreign businessmen to become partners with his
government in "joint ventures" in which the foreign investors contributed the
capital and management while the Cuban state leased to them a docile and cheap
labor force, a sales territory and a captive market that was not subject to the
risks of competition or the conflicts of labor unionism.
To ensure that the entrepreneurs would not be the Trojan horse of feared
democratic changes, the government appointed numerous retired army officers and
members of the political police as directors and top executives of the joint
ventures. To them, the government assigned a dual mission: to make sure that
corrupt foreign businessmen did not contaminate the selfless Cuban workers, and
to watch the workers closely so they wouldn't deviate from the noble principles
of socialism.
By late 1998, when Hugo Chávez came to power, Castro already had proven that he
could avail himself of foreign capitalists to finance -- without risk -- the
largely unproductive Cuban dictatorship. So the Venezuelan gradually began to
re-examine and rewrite the contracts with the foreign investors, especially in
the sector of the exploration and exploitation of oil fields, heeding the
premise of his Cuban comrade that association with international businessmen
would strengthen state-owned capitalism. Oil companies operating in Venezuela
that were affected by the rewriting of contracts included British Petroleum,
Chevron, BP, ConocoPhillips, Total, Repsol YPF and Statoil. Exxon preferred to
sell its installations to Repsol and withdraw from Venezuela. Whereas Lenin had
stated that capitalists would be willing to sell the rope with which they'd be
hanged, Castro had demonstrated that capitalists would gladly build the gallows
using the executioner's blueprint if they could somehow make a buck.
After the presidential election victory of Evo Morales, Bolivia may be the third
Latin American country to go this route. Vice President Álvaro García Linares, a
former university professor and one-time guerrilla sent to prison for fighting
against a democratic government, said so recently in an article published in
Paris by Le Monde Diplomatique. Bolivia, he said, is going to develop "Andean-Amazonian
capitalism," in reality a new name for the old discredited socialism. Of what
does that new contrivance consist? According to Don Álvaro, of "constructing a
strong state that will regulate the expansion of the industrial economy, extract
its surpluses and transfer them to the communitarian sector, so as to foster
forms of self-organization and mercantile development that are properly Andean
and Amazonian." To achieve that objective, which basically means to exploit the
major natural-gas deposits that exist in Bolivia, Messrs. Morales and García
Linera will have to become partners with big foreign companies. Companies that
are likely to be most affected are Spain's Repsol YPF and Brazil's Petrobras.
To participate in these joint ventures in countries where human rights and labor
laws are not respected should constitute a serious ethical problem for foreign
businessmen and investors. It is absolute hypocrisy to state that an
international entrepreneur should not invest in countries that use child labor
or violate certain ecological standards while allowing that entrepreneur to
associate with tyrannical governments that horribly mistreat the workers and, in
particular, the societies they subjugate.
For example, the foreign hotel chains operating in Cuba allow their partner, the
government, to practice a policy of apartheid by forbidding Cubans to use hotel
facilities, even if they can pay with foreign currency. According to Delfin
Fernandez, a defector from Cuban counterintelligence writing and speaking in the
Spanish media, some foreign hotels even allow the installation in their rooms of
concealed video cameras to record guests in compromising situations that lead to
blackmail. To what degree are those businessmen participating in criminal
activities? Note that it is not the same to invest or create an enterprise in a
country ruled by dictatorship as to join the dictators and become accomplices of
their misdeeds.
Business schools in the Western world usually teach courses in ethics. And
that's good, because we assume that the system of market economies and free
enterprise, the counterpart of democracy, rests on moral convictions whose
tenets are the upholding of truth, the observance of fair rules and respect for
people's dignity. If we expect politicians and professionals to behave in
accordance with a strict deontological code and demand that they be punished if
they deviate from the rules, why should we exclude businessmen from the same
obligations and standards?
International businessmen and investors should ponder hard the type of
responsibility they assume when offered a partnership in Latin America with
tyrannical governments or tyrannies in the making. It is well to remember that
some of the German companies that collaborated with the Nazis in World War II
ended up paying indemnities to the regime's victims for several decades.
Something like that might happen again.
Mr. Montaner is an author and syndicated journalist living in Madrid.
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